“The bottom line on nuclear weapons is that when the president gives the order, it must be followed. There’s about four minutes between the order being given and the people responsible for launching nuclear weapons to do so,” Clinton said.

After receiving some backlash for revealing such sensitive information, she tried to backtrack, but no one’s falling for it.

Retired Army Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg, who worked for the Joint Chiefs of Staff as director for all communications for U.S. forces and now advises the Trump campaign, responded to Clinton’s attack, telling The Daily Caller Wednesday evening that it was “foolish to talk about any nuclear command control timing decision.”

He said her cavalier statement corresponds to the cavalier attitude she had with the server in her basement, adding that it was “incredibly” foolish for anyone to do anything like that.

Former intelligence officers and military operatives suggested Clinton’s careless reference was a possible violation of operational security, known as OPSEC, Fox reported.

A former Navy SEAL officer told Fox that Clinton’s statement appeared to be a “direct violation of U.S. national security protocols and governing law. Our country has no greater secrets than those that protect our strategic nuclear deterrence capability.”

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He added that Clinton’s statement validated “with specificity something of great sensitivity that has long been speculated by our adversaries and others in the national arena, including academics and think tanks.”

Clinton tried to suggest that Trump would be casual with nuclear weapons, but she has already proven how casual she is when it comes matters of national security — more than once.